Human Development
Motivation & Emotion
Personality Theory
Social Psychology
Psychological Disorders
100

The phase of prenatal development where the fertilized egg rapidly divides and implants in the uterus.

What is the Germinal Phase?

100

Motivation that arises from internal satisfaction or enjoyment of a task, without external incentives.

What is intrinsic motivation?

100

Cultures that value group harmony and prioritize the needs of the collective over individual desires.

What is collectivism?

100

Rules, often unwritten, that guide appropriate behavior in specific settings.

What are social norms?

100

A psychological disorder exists on a continuum ranging from mild to this level.

What is severe?

200

Toxic substances, such as nicotine or alcohol, that can cross the placenta and cause developmental damage to the fetus.

What are teratogens?

200

The core psychological need in McClelland's theory that drives individuals to pursue challenging goals.

What is the need for achievement (n Ach)?

200

The "Big Five" personality trait that describes someone who is organized, dependable, and responsible.

What is conscientiousness?

200

The mental framework that organizes knowledge, and the expectation about the sequence of behaviors in a social situation.

What are schemas and scripts?


200

The classic sign of psychopathology involving false sensory experiences, such as hearing voices.

What are hallucinations?

300

According to Piaget, a child in this cognitive stage is characterized by egocentrism, animistic thinking, and centration.

What is the Preoperational stage?

300

Maslow’s pyramid-shaped model culminates in this drive to realize one’s full potential.

What is self-actualization?

300

The idea that a person's behavior, cognitive processes, and the environment all influence each other continuously.

What is reciprocal determinism?

300

The tendency to overattribute a person's behavior to their internal traits while underestimating situational factors.

What is the fundamental attribution error?

300

The psychological disorder characterized by chronic, free-floating anxiety that is not tied to a specific object or situation.

What is Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)?

400

This process eliminates unused neural connections, making the brain more efficient, especially around age 11.

What is synaptic pruning?

400

The theory of emotion that suggests emotion arises from both physiological arousal and the cognitive interpretation of that arousal.

What is the Schachter-Singer two-factor theory?

400

Projective tests like the Rorschach Inkblot Test and the TAT are designed to uncover these.

What are unconscious thoughts and motives?

400

The phenomenon where the desire for group harmony suppresses dissent, leading to poor decision-making like the Bay of Pigs invasion

What is groupthink?

400

A learning disorder that specifically affects the ability to read and process written language, which is not related to intelligence.

What is dyslexia?

500

The level of Kohlberg’s morality where decisions are guided by universal ethical principles, even if they conflict with the law.

What is Postconventional morality?

500

According to the inverted-U theory, this type of task requires lower levels of arousal for optimal performance.

What are complex tasks?

500

Carl Jung proposed this universal repository of memories and images shared across all humanity

What is the collective unconscious?

500

The term for the minority of participants in the Milgram experiment who resisted authority and refused to continue administering shocks.

What is heroic defiance?

500

The former name for Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), which involves the presence of two or more distinct personality states.

What is multiple personality disorder?

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